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A World of Difference
A highlight from Emotional Health: Becky Castle Miller on Understanding Oppression's Impact on Emotional Health
"Hi, podcast listeners. Welcome to the A World of Difference podcast. We have so many guests on this show making a difference in our lives, making a difference all around the world with the expertise that they bring. And yet so many of you are reaching out to me saying, you want more? It's not enough. Just what we're putting on these podcast episodes for you. And so I am here to extend a very warm welcome to you to our Difference Maker community where you can join for as little as $5 a month to get all this extra content out the gate. You're going to get 30 plus minisodes of exclusive content not available for the regular podcast listeners and an exclusive minisode every month. And you'll get exclusive voting power to help us pick podcast topics and more. And that's at our Changers tier. There's three different main tiers and then an extra larger tier. But whatever tier that you join at, you will be included in this extra content. And I know that many of you are wanting to go a little bit deeper. And so even though it gets a little wild in there sometimes because of how deep we go, I want you to join us there. This extra content is very special. It means a great deal to me to be a part of this community with you. And I would love to just exchange ideas or perspectives that you have around these different episodes. And that's the place where we do it. So please show up to our Difference Maker community. Give us $5 out of your pocket every month. And I think that you'll have a lot of fun in there because we do. And I would love for you to join us. So go to patreon .com slash welcome to the A World of Difference podcast. I'm Lori Adams Brown, and this is a podcast for those who are different and want to make a difference. Today starts our brand new series where we are starting to talk about emotional health and happiness. And our guest today is Becky Castle Miller. Becky is a PhD student at Wheaton College studying New Testament with Esau McCauley. And her dissertation research is about emotions in the scriptures, specifically the Gospel of Luke. She writes and speaks on emotional, mental, and spiritual health in the church. She graduated from Northern Seminary where she studied with Dr. Scott McKnight, who is a friend of the show and has been on for a couple of times. And I know many of you have read his books. She actually also has written a book with Dr. Scott McKnight, a discipleship workbook, and it's called Following King Jesus. And she is also working on another project with him. She and her husband and their five kids and cat returned to the U .S. in 2020 after living in the Netherlands for eight years where she served as discipleship director at an international church. Today we're going to dig into some issues around emotional health in the church and specifically I'm going to be asking her about her perspective on what has gone on in recent days in the Southern Baptist Convention here in the United States. There are a lot of people around the world that have been watching this, both who are in the Christian community and outside of it. We've seen a lot of things on the news lately around women pastors. There's been a lot of, I would say, very emotionally unhealthy situations that people are trying to process in the aftermath of that. So we're going to ask her perspective on that and many other things around her research and how we can learn to move forward in a more emotionally healthy way in all of our spaces, whether it's our faith spaces, just regular neighborhood community spaces, government spaces, business, education, wherever we work and live and play and find our spiritual community. Becky has something to say to us around how to welcome the emotions that we have and what her research is showing her around how we can do that better together. So I am so excited to welcome for our first guest in this new series, Becky Castle Miller. Hello, Becky, and a very, very warm welcome to you to the A World of Difference podcast today. I'm so excited to be here, Laurie. Me too. I'm glad we're finally getting to meet. Yeah. There's so much we have in common, some mutual friends and just international experience and being women in the evangelical or post evangelical church. There's just a lot of crossover in our circles. And so I'm very excited about the things we're going to talk about today and hopeful that they can help us both be emotionally healthy, spiritually healthy about these conversations, but also find some calls to action where we can come together and really make a difference. But just right out the gate, a lot of people listening to this podcast are reeling from some of the things that we all watched, either. I mean, just even on regular news channels here in the United States and even globally, things being covered around the Southern Baptist Convention this week and a lot of nuance there for many of us. But I think for women to see that women pastors were used sort of as this sort of pawn, I guess, in a lot of ways to distract from abuse of women and men, but also to have what appears to be not an emotionally or psychologically or even physically safe place for women as they kind of took this backseat to a fight by these domineering men in our news feeds. And so I would just love for, first of all, to give you the opportunity to say, how do you feel as you have been watching this yourself? And do you have any things that, as you express how you feel, would be important for us to understand about how to kind of move forward? Yeah. Well, I think Beth Allison Barr had some really good commentary. So I would point people to her substack. She is formerly Southern Baptist, and so she's a little bit more connected to that world personally than I am. I've never been in a Southern Baptist church. I've been in many, many diverse churches and some kind of non -denominational, loosely Baptist, but never Southern Baptist. So it feels a little removed from me directly. So people like Beth Allison Barr are great to speak into that. One of my biggest concerns is Rick Warren's posturing of himself as this late convert to supporting women, but not really supporting vulnerable women. He put out a statement before the convention that he's changed his mind on women pastors, but I think he's still withholding eldership from women. And yet at the same time, he appointed a successor at Saddleback who has some pretty serious allegations of abusive leadership from his former church. And that has not been satisfactorily addressed. So there's a disconnect there between what Rick Warren says he wants to be as a champion for women, and yet he seems to be turning a blind eye or intentionally maybe even covering up abuse. So that's one concern I have about the stories coming out of the convention. I am glad that Barber won the presidency because he's a marginally better candidate than the other guy. But Barber has really been a lot of talk and not a ton of decisive action against abuse, and he is still against women in embracing their full ministry gifts. So it's like some small victories, but yet also it's been a platform for women to be demeaned publicly, like just to hear so many negative and critical things said about women in ministry. So I understand why a lot of women are leaving Southern Baptist churches, and I think that's actually a really healthy decision for those who make that choice. Yes, amen to that sister. Yeah, you know, having walked through abuse at the hands of Andy Wood, that is Rick Warren's successor, and at Saddleback, and, you know, being not the original whistleblower because there were two before me in the news last summer, but, you know, also knowing because I don't have an NDA, right, and my husband doesn't either, we refuse our NDA tied to severance and medical insurance. And so that's, you know, why I can speak, but I just personally know so many stories, and I know the stories that we told to the faux investigation at Saddleback last summer, and I say faux because a hiring agency is not a third -party investigation that just happens in a couple of days, you know, that needs months, it needs grace ministries, it needs a Wade Mullen, or it needs somebody with an expertise in, you know, something like an evangelical church with abuse allegations that are credible, and, you know, and their image management around that, you know, that's definitely something that's a specialty. And so when you're not willing to do the substantial work, I think that what I saw at Saddleback was, unfortunately, oddly consistent with what I've seen in Southern Baptist as a whole. I was a Southern Baptist for 45 years, right? I was a missionary kid all my life, and I married a missionary kid who was a Southern Baptist, too, and went to Southern Baptist University, went to Southern Baptist Seminary, worked as an IMB would at his previous church, Echo Church, before Saddleback, and walking through that, you know, multiple different types of abuse, you know, emotional abuse, physical, psychological, not physical, sorry, that does exist in the stories, but not mine. But I think that understanding emotional abuse, psychological abuse, spiritual abuse is a conversation to have in the church, but also in our society at large, and I think it's an opportunity for us to lead the way. And I think that it was not shocking that Saddleback was kicked out. I think that what is sad is that they were kicked out for women pastors and not for abuse, and therefore, Rick Warren and Andy Wood, you know, Andy being my abuser and Rick Warren being the one that covered up my abuse, and that of many others, are seen now as heroes and martyrs for the cause of women. And, you know, that was sort of disturbing to watch, even though I'm not a part of the Southern Baptist anymore. So I also, I love the work Beth Allison Barr is doing. I think many of us calling from the outside for women to be free, and also warning them about the places to go and silent complicity in bystanders and watching abuse happen to women over the years might be tempted to believe a Rick Warren or an Andy Wood if they start some new denomination or whatever happens in the wake of all this and whatever the point of all this was, to just be warned that there are some faux egalitarian spaces out there, and that's the conversation that's really going to be helpful, I think, going forward. I'd love for you to tell us more, though, about your research around emotions. We don't often talk about that, and I think what you're doing is really fascinating. You're doing research in the emotions of the Gospel of Luke. What led you to this particular era of study, and how is it relevant even to the conversation we're having right now? Yeah, I feel like I have dual interests in abuse and trauma and healing from those things and emotional health, and they're often viewed as two separate issues, but they overlap really significantly. They interweave with each other. Of course, they are different academic fields. You can do a dissertation in abuse. You can do a dissertation in trauma. You can do a dissertation in emotions, which is what I'm doing, but I'm hoping to bring those conversations together a little bit in my dissertation. I just finished my first year at Wheaton College in a PhD in New Testament, which is fantastic, and I really appreciate Wheaton supporting me in doing a multidisciplinary dissertation. So it is a New Testament project, but I'm leaning really heavily on some neuroscientific and psychological models of emotion, which is one thing that's been lacking in biblical studies is really the latest scientific research on emotion, so I'm excited to get to do that work. So I'm going to be taking some trauma and neuroscience classes in the counseling school and in the neuroscience department to supplement my New Testament work, and then I'm also hoping to bring in the impact of trauma and abuse on emotions. We'll see. It's only one dissertation, but I think those are really important aspects. When we look at emotion in the Gospels, we're looking at the emotions of an oppressed and traumatized people who are drawing on the history of oppressed and traumatized peoples over hundreds and thousands of years. So the emotions that Jesus' disciples learned from their culture are drawing from a culture of oppression, repeated you know, the slavery in Egypt and the Exodus, the Babylonian captivity, and release from that, and then in their current day, the occupation by the Romans. So I think we have to consider what impact trauma might be having on the emotions that they're constructing. When I did an analysis this past year on the emotions mentioned in the Gospel of Luke, I found 158 instances of emotion, and it depends how you categorize them, but so many of those instances were talking about fear. Jesus and angels are saying over and over again, don't be afraid. Don't be afraid. Well, why do they need to say don't be afraid? Perhaps it's because they're talking to people dealing with hypervigilance who are constantly feeling afraid in their bodies because they live in dangerous circumstances. So I think fear is a big component of gospel emotions. Jesus also talks about worry or anxiousness, and he talks about terror. So it's just a lot going on with fear -based emotions in the Gospel of Luke, and I think that the trauma of the people he's serving might have something to do with that. So that's one angle that I'm hoping to take, and we'll see where the rest of it goes. I think your work is so fascinating and so needed. I mean, you and I both spent time overseas, and so we understand in different cultures people express their emotions very differently. I was just in Abu Dhabi and Dubai earlier this year in March, and it's not the first time I've been to anywhere in North Africa in the Middle East, but we largely know that the way emotions are expressed in Middle Eastern culture versus white evangelical North American culture or even the Dutch, like very different expressions, right? And so we read sometimes things from the lens of maybe sitting in, I don't know, Wheaton, Illinois, right, with a bunch of white people around us reading it in a particular English translation, and we read things like sackcloth and ashes. Well, that's weird, you know, or with these like imprecatory Psalms that are just so full of like, wow, like, can we pray those things? Like, that's a lot. It's just, you know, we have books, you know, like Pete Scazzero's Emotionally Healthy Discipleship. We have all these things that are just, there's things that are happening right now, and the call to more lament, you know, the call to look back in our history and ask God to forgive us for our sins, not individually, but as a people. How have we been complicit? How are we currently complicit in abuse in the SBC, in racism, in what is, you know, started under racism because of, you know, enslaved peoples on forced labor camps, and how have those decisions, the root of that, produced the fruit of lording over and dominating people for the purpose of white male supremacy or patriarchy and things that are not helping any of us. So when we dig into emotional health as individuals, we have to look at it collectively too, and I think that our Western individualistic culture really makes it hard. We're very, we have a lot of blind spots if we only stay there. So the global church has really taught me so much about this. I'm so excited that you're studying under Esau McCauley. It's such a great opportunity for you. As you look into some of this area of emotional, mental, and spiritual health in the church, what are some common challenges that you find or misconceptions that you've come across, and maybe how could churches better address these issues? There's a lot of misunderstanding of emotion in just typical church conversation, and there's also a lack of knowledge of trauma, and those intersect again as well.

A World of Difference
A highlight from Change: Dr. L. Carol Scott on Thriving in Unhealthy Environments through Self-Care
"Hi, podcast listeners. Welcome to the A World of Difference podcast. We have so many guests on this show making a difference in our lives, making a difference all around the world with the expertise that they bring. And yet so many of you are reaching out to me saying, you want more? It's not enough. Just what we're putting on these podcast episodes for you. And so I am here to extend a very warm welcome to you to our Difference Maker community where you can join for as little as $5 a month to get all this extra content out the gate. You're going to get 30 plus minisodes of exclusive content not available for the regular podcast listeners and an exclusive minisode every month. And you'll get exclusive voting power to help us pick podcast topics and more. And that's at our Changers tier. There's three different main tiers and then an extra larger tier. But whatever tier that you join at, you will be included in this extra content. And I know that many of you are wanting to go a little bit deeper. And so even though it gets a little wild in there sometimes because of how deep we go, I want you to join us there. This extra content is very special. It means a great deal to me to be a part of this community with you. And I would love to just exchange ideas or perspectives that you have around these different episodes. And that's the place where we do it. So please show up to our Difference Maker community. Give us $5 out of your pocket every month. And I think that you'll have a lot of fun in there because we do. And I would love for you to join us. So go to patreon .com slash welcome to the A World of Difference podcast. I'm Lori Adams Brown, and this is a podcast for those who are different and want to make a difference. Today on the show, we have Dr. L. Carol Scott. She's going to be talking to us today as a trauma -informed developmental psychologist, a TEDx speaker, a coach, and a No. 1 international bestselling author. Carol brings the SASS self -aware success strategies to help you get along better in the adult playgrounds where you play. I know many of us are concerned about some of the situations and systems in workplaces and faith -based spaces where people who have been survivors of abuse or even potentially, you know, grown up in homes or faith -based spaces where abuse was happening and maybe even covered up really may not have had the tools to address those issues in our adult lives and in the workplace. And it can cause all kinds of situations that are as small as just a regular conflict or as large as actually experiencing abuse oneself in one's work environment or especially in the faith -based spaces. As many of you know, I experienced abuse in a workplace environment, which was a faith -based space, a megachurch. And systems the that were happening there, we could have used a lot more conversation and tools, especially from the one who was abusing us, so we could recognize some of those things a lot earlier and learn to be self -aware about what was happening in terms of the gaslighting many of us were experiencing and abuse that we also endured. So from a psychological perspective of someone who's trauma -informed, I felt like it would be helpful to learn from some different experts. So we're going to be having different people on the podcast to help us speak into these issues around mental health and wellness going forward. We're going to take just a few opportunities this summer to dig into that here and there as different podcast guests come on the show. But as we talk about this, and some of this might, you know, be triggering, so trigger warning to any of you who this conversation is too much right now, just feel free to stop the podcast now or take it in chunks, because we will be dealing with, you know, the topic of how to be aware in your own self and your own body around issues of abuse that might be taking place toward you or around you that you're observing as a bystander. And so, yeah, listener discretion advised from this point forward about this interview. And so hopefully this conversation today will help us all be a little more self -aware about some strategies we can use to help ourselves flourish and help all human beings flourish. So a very warm welcome today to Dr. L. Carol Scott. Hello, Dr. Scott, thank you so much for joining us today. I am so thrilled to be here, Lori. Thank you for having me. Well, we love talking to people that do all kinds of amazing things and write things and make differences around the world and bring their differences to the table. So it's wonderful to have you and get to know you a little bit better today and the work that you've done. So for those who haven't met you before or you're new to them, why don't you give us a little bit about your own background and how you became interested in this field of work that you do? Okay, I'd love to do that. I call myself a trauma -informed developmental psychologist. And what that means is that I understand how children grow up from birth to adulthood, human development overall, but particularly I specialize in the birth to seven age range. And about how that period of our lives in particular makes us who we are as adults interacting with other adults, our relationships with each other as adults, and the unique ways in which we express our difference in the world is something that is created in those first seven years of our lives. It's a significant period of time, isn't it? And number one puts a lot of responsibility on parents and villages that are raising children together. But it also is important for us to know as adults that things that may have happened in our childhood can still be impacting us as adults, well, you know, to midlife and beyond. And there's a lot for people to unpack there, right? So, um, you might say not just can be influencing, but absolutely are. Yeah, absolutely are. No, yes. Yeah. Well, this is exciting as a topic to talk about today, because I know there are many people, especially during the COVID pandemic, I talked with therapists all the time that are professional therapists working in our community here where I live in Silicon Valley and actually was speaking to someone earlier today, and she said, if you came out of that whole COVID period of time, especially a year and a half of online school, and you aren't talking to a therapist, maybe you should because we've all collectively as a planet dealt with something really difficult. And so but your website really mentions that you specialize in resilience and change. So can you explain what that means and and sort of why that's important? Yes, sure, absolutely. So we, as young children, really have the opportunity to try out natural instincts for social and emotional connection with other people. And depending on what kind of response we get from the adults who are our caregivers and our educators, we may come into our adulthood with a great deal of interpersonal capacity for really healthy relationships that are fun and joyful and enriching and don't drive us nuts. And if we get other kinds of responses or if we have if we participate in a cultural trauma, which I think the quarantine times of the pandemic were, those can shape us as well. So absolutely kids, kids who went through that period, young kids who went through that period, have a very big bunch of baggage probably to unpack, depending on the health of their grown ups. So, you know, what I really want people to know, though, is no matter how hard it got. So in the world of adverse childhood experiences, if you have seen the list of the 10 really adverse things that impact children's development in a negative way, so much so that they create physical health conditions, heart problems, cancer, diseases like diabetes in your childhood, you can still have resilience and overcome that and have an adult life that is rich. And that's really my key messages. You're not stuck with what you grew up with. There is recovery. There is change. Such a good message. Yeah, you can't control what happened to you, but you can give yourself the gift of doing that deep work and, you know, working toward flourishing for yourself and for those that you get to interact with. And it's brave work. It's courageous work. And it takes people to walk alongside us. So what are some of the common challenges, though, that you feel like people might face when they're trying to make these changes in their lives? And how do you help them overcome those? Goodwin, and this this isn't a universal in terms of childhood across cultures, and I just want to be clear about that, that different different cultures, different countries in the world have different values about children, different beliefs about children's competence, different resources to support children and young families. And so it isn't always the same. But I work primarily with families in the U .S. where what I see a lot of is we blow toddlerhood pretty badly. We're not good with toddlers. We're not good with people who are independent and want to tell us all about what they think, what they want and how they're feeling. And we tend to give them messages. We indulge that their emotions are overwhelming. What they want is wrong and they don't they're not understandable. They can't be understood. And that is a very frustrating set of messages for someone whose whole goal every moment of its waking day is to communicate. This is who I am. This is what I'm about. Look at me, see me for who I am. And we're just like, I'm sorry, what? And so that place of not having growing up to be an adult who is not self -confident and relaxed how about I'm feeling and the fact that it may be different from how you're feeling, what I want and being OK with asking for it, even if I get told no. Or God forbid I get told yes. And what it is that I'm thinking, what my opinions are, what I understand the world to be, my stories about life and myself and you. And if I can't be comfortable and feel safe expressing that that's who I am uniquely me, I'm a single point on the map, one datum, you know, then I can't hardly let you be that either. And that is the fundamental place where a lot of relationships go awry is that I don't really know who I am. I don't really know how to express all of myself in an authentic way. And so I can't believe that you're also that you're authentic because you're in the same stick that I'm in probably. And so we from the beginning don't feel seen and don't feel like we can communicate ourselves. Yeah, it's good. I'm sure in the work that you do, you get to see people transform and overcome all kinds of things. And so do you have any story that's really, you know, been meaningful to you about somebody's successful, you know, overcoming of obstacles in their own lives? And I'd be curious to know, were there any key factors that related to how they overcame with your help? I, what is called to mind immediately is a woman I know who really heard that message of who you were when you were 15 months old and first were out walking around and taking in the world and expressing yourself as you. That person really was told that she wasn't OK. That person came away with the message that it's not OK to be who I am. And I and and she came to a place of saying, I will do that, I will be myself. And if it means that I have to separate myself from some people that I've been close to for a long time in my life, then I'm going to do that until I can be myself with them, until I can speak in my voice. And so she basically just sort of covered up the page in her address book that had all of her family members on it and just did not interact with them for a while. Until she felt that she could go there and say, this is who I am. And it wouldn't matter how they reacted to it. That was the most amazing transformation I've seen. And it was a difficult one. And here's the resilience news story. She was able to reconnect with those family members and build really positive relationships with them before a couple of them died, before her parents were gone. And so she is back in relationship with those people. But she couldn't do it as long as she wasn't being anybody. In particular, yeah, that's whatever she thought would please them. And so it's such hard work and such difficult choices, but that's the work with a capital T and a capital W, isn't it? Yes, and it's worth it, you know, we're social beings. Yeah, it's absolutely so worth it. We do need support and it's hard to find when you're making a whole different change. You know, I think about people I've known who've been in a cult, for example, and then when they don't toe the line or they leave, they get shunned and they lose people. But they have to do that deep, hard work of saying, what is it about me? You know, how was I gaslit? And like, you know, it's hard to come out of it when you don't have the support while you're doing the work. And that can be really hard. Do you have any tips for people who are having to, for example, cut off family members who are maybe abusive in various ways, physically or sexually or, you know, all kinds of abuse that could happen in a family or coming out of a cult and, you know, making those changes while you need people? Have you had to walk through that with anyone else or anything similar? And if so, what advice would you give them on how to find new relationships that support them? I think that's such a wonderful perspective to take on this, because sometimes that that walk gets really hard. I think that I've moved through places in my life like that where what I had to do was simply walk away from connections that had proven to be, if not in a classic sense, toxic, then hurtful to me and unsupportive of my well -being, my joy, my productivity in life. And I actually I was involved in a spiritual community for a while where the charismatic leader, I wouldn't have called it a cult, but it had a charismatic leader for sure. And she and I really replicated some dynamics of my birth family, some of the trauma dynamics of my birth family, some of the painful interactions. And so I had to get to the point where I could see it. It was a healing for me to get to the point where I could see, oh, I see what this is. I've done this before. I've done this dance before and this is here to teach me. This is like a new lens on something I'm familiar with. And so it took a friend. I think it's so helpful to build relationships with the people who see you and who can be compassionately honoring of your humanity when you're completely falling apart. Those kind of connections are so vital when facing something difficult. And it was a good friend who just was a mirror for me and said, you can walk away from this. You're you're a grown up now. You're not the child who can't leave. You can you can go take care of yourself and you're strong enough to do that. And so I did. And that's not the only experience that I have with people becoming connected to someone who is amazing, a charismatic person who is amazing. It's easy to do and it's easiest to do if we don't know who we are. If I don't have a strong sense of myself as someone who has her own ideas and her thoughts and her opinions, feelings and emotions that are unique to me and a set of things that I'm looking for in the world, things that I want that make me what I feel, what I think and what I want makes me a unique package. Ain't nobody else like that. And if everybody knew that with safety and with comfort and could relax into that, we would be a whole different kind of world. I believe we would. And yeah, I mean, we're sort of always talking about here on this podcast is our differences are beautiful and wonderful. And if we were all the same, how boring. You know, it's springtime here where I live in Silicon Valley and I love seeing all the diversity of just flowers in my neighborhood. And you can see one rose on a rose bush and it's slightly unique from every other rose on the same rose bush with the same color. And that beautiful diversity in the creation around us, it, you know, brings on wonder to my brain and my body and in humanity as well. And and it's hard. You know, I have three teenagers and the teenagers can be particularly challenging in human development where especially like eighth grade, you know, I have two 15 year old twins. They were 14 last year. And eighth grade in particular feels like this time where you just want to belong. You want to be like everybody else. Like you want to be unique, but you don't at the same time. And so, yeah, I think when you get in environments like especially a spiritually abusive one or a toxic one in that way, that can really do a lot of damage to us. It could take a while to get out because you might have some good feelings in that group while at the same time you don't feel free to be yourself. And so thank God you had a friend that helped you know that it's OK to walk away and find a healthy space. Thank you for sharing that very vulnerably. And you know, here's the thing with we if if in my community of choice for spiritual nurture, however, I define that I go to a Bible church or I go to a temple or I go to a center for spiritual living or, you know, someplace that seems obscure to mainstream Christians, it doesn't really matter as long as I am accepted and loved there as a unique individual, a unique incarnation of spirit, a unique manifestation of God's creativity, however kind of language you put to it. I am a pinpoint of creation. I am one data point of creation and I am as changing and as different as the roses on the bushes and the, you know, the cycles and the seasons of this planet. We're all in a creative process that is about change and movement. And so here we are. We're doing it. We are and it's beautiful and it's it's something to celebrate. And the more we let the rose bushes be themselves and not try to make them tulips or carnations, the more they get to be who they are. Right. And that's just that's really nice. But you've written quite a bit. You've written something called the resilient mindset. Give us a little bit of overview of what you're talking about. Is that right? The resilient mindset. Is that the name of one of your books? No, it is an article. Maybe. Are you just talking about possibly maybe that's what it is. Yes. But you talk about resilience. Right. How can people have more of a resilient mindset when it seems like it's just one hit after another? It's COVID. It's family issues. It's your grades in school. You know, your best friend broke up with you as a friend or I mean, like, how do you stay resilient when it just feels like there's a tsunami wave after wave after wave hitting you? It feels to me like the two keys are it sounds almost I'm trying to say it, but gratitude is one of them. And the other is to recognize that in addition to having adverse experiences in our life, we have positive ones. And it's easiest to talk about our adverse experiences. We get a lot of attention. That's another dynamic that's not necessarily healthy in relationships that we give each other attention for complaining about the hard stuff, complaining about how difficult everything is, complaining about the things that have gone, quote, wrong. And we also have moments of utter bliss and joy and great things happen. And somebody passes you, a stranger passes you in the mall and says, my God, your hair looks great. I mean, you just you have the positive experiences, too. We just don't tend to perseverate on them. We don't talk them to death like we do all the things that are a problem right now. I am in oh, gosh, I think I'm about nine weeks now into healing a broken femur. That's right. Yeah. Which is like a big bone for anybody to break. But for an old lady in my my stage of life is like, that's a really big deal to break my femur. And I thought, you know, I still think I'm thirty five in my mind. So I thought I got this. You know, I'm going back to my full time RV lifestyle. I'm going to be driving. I'm going to be rolling out the hose and the power cord and doing all the things. I'm nuts. I'm absolutely nuts. And I can sit here and complain about all the pain and all the ways hard and the fact that I probably threw myself back into this too quickly. Or I can tell you about all the marvelous things that have happened because and through the pain and the disruption to my life and my plans about how things should go have been left by the roadside like a hundred times over the past nine weeks. And that's OK, because there's still great stuff happening. There's still positive experiences for me to blend with the adverse ones. And that's resilience right there. So good. It is true that our brains can hold the hard and the good all at once. I think there's circles in life or people in life that forces to choose to only live in one. But the reality is life happens. And acts of God happen that are out of our control. There's and there's mistakes we make and we mess up our own lives like we do things, too. And so but just to jump over it and not sit in the pain for a little bit to learn the lesson doesn't it doesn't heal our femur, but it also doesn't heal our minds and souls. I have a metaphor. I'm studying in my religious, spiritual tradition and philosophy, which is religious science or the Centers for Spiritual Living. I'm studying about, you know, if if the divine, whatever we think of as the unifying principle, the God stuff of the universe, if that is omnipresent, everywhere present, then everything that happens is God is being created in the moment as a divine thing. And so I've developed this metaphor for myself that my life is like being a really clever, hardworking little beetle who's tending two square meters of bark on the side of a big tree in an endless, infinite forest. And I beetle around my little two square meters of bark all day long, very happily, making it the best little square bark any beetle could tend and making good things happen for the tree because of my little big bark. And sometimes there's giant storms that pound me with rain and knock me off my little square and the winds blow and leaves fly by and I get hit. And I think it's a bad thing. I think it's terrible. But what I don't understand is the forest needs the rain.

The Dan Bongino Show
Dr. Scott Atlas on Anthony Fauci and Francis Collins Colluding Against Great Barrington Declaration
"Doc read the book Obviously one of the publishers involved in the publication of this book I was blown away by it from the start So much stuff we heard from the media that it just seemed to be misinformation You expose in this book given the real trusted behind the scenes account I'll put it up on the desk here So Fox nation folks you can see it My first question to you doctor You've been a source for truth on this and sanity on this coronavirus pandemic from the start Yet others sadly doctor haven't I believe Doctor Fauci being one of them And given the recent revelations about him and Francis Collins colluding behind the scenes to politically attack the authors of the great Barrington declaration of later been proven right with some of the recommendations I mean why does this guy still have a job doctor He's been wrong consistently the entire time Fauci that is Yeah well that's a difficult question to answer Obviously I mean here we have somebody And this is the point here People Doctor Fauci and doctor birx our government bureaucrats in government positions for 40 years And the reason that people stay in those kinds of positions for 40 years is not because they're politically neutral It's because they have the skills to navigate a heavily politicized environment by making friends with their people and agencies by making friends with people in the media And basically these are essentially political jobs They are bureaucrats They're not scientists They're not critical thinkers as I found out in my meetings with them They're not open to debate and questing and using the scientific method which is basically based on the free exchange of ideas and then knowing the evidence and coming up with a solution And so it's hard to say why they have a job these people but they are very skillful at keeping it

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"Time so so everybody knows the bare implant is the oh never mind listed overtime so everybody knows the bare implant is the bridge enhanced. Acl restoration right. Hopefully it can chop..

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"A remarkable accomplishment for sure they got their press. Release out before we could get ours out. That's acne how you know how badly on me. Yeah no it's awesome. So i want to get back to the listeners here because i i always liked know. My mother's listening. Martha's so we have to make sure that everybody understands. The bear implant is the bridge enhanced. Acl restoration as a general rule. If you terrier acl what we've been doing across. The world is basically reconstructing it so the has never really been able to heal although there is some evidence. We'll talk about that in a second but as general. It's always been you have to give a new one. You can't repair it doesn't repair very well. Because there's no good blood supply so you take attendance from someplace else in the body from the kneecap from the hamstring tendon. And you reconstruct an acl and patients can do well. They can back the sport they can do their thing. But it certainly hasn't been nailed cured and there's lots of issues with regards to acl reconstruction that have not really been figured out with the bear implant in particular for whatever reason our body likes bovine tissue and it's not just within orthopedics. It has cardiac implications soft tissue elsewhere. And so it's really sort of remarkable that this similar process from what you saw with rotation could then be utilized within the baron plant and rather than reconstructing what you're doing you're taking this implant putting a little bit of blood on it from the patient at the time of the surgery. And then you're attaching between the two stumps to allow the body to heal itself and create. Its own acl to heal. Which really is not really been done. There's a lot of good science. Has been coming out with greg de felice. Who's one of our What of are a big fans here on the ortho show. I call him the acl repairer. So there's been a lot of a lot more discussion about the repair of the al. And i think in particular the bear implant is going to have a really remarkable place at the table for that. Acl repair discussion. What do you think. Yeah so a couple of points. I wanna make sudan. The audience knows how to think about this first thing. Is that the the bear which is the brigid hands. Acl restoration is an implant that reabsorbed within about eight weeks. So goes away and it's replaced by the new growth of tissue. How this works is that interoperative lay. Small amount of the patient's blood is injected into the implant and an implant is inserted between the two tone ends with the acl and that blood is protected from the snowmobile fluid. And that's the reason. Why is he. L. can't heal on. Its own because a blood clot had formed. You need a blood. Clot kickoff. The healing 'cascade. So what we've done is almost mimic the environment ec in the mc l. Which can heal on it so with implant the blood clot forms. And that's why we say that it's the body heals itself because zapped blood clot than than in tracks the biker blast the blood vessels which signals the growth actors and it wound healing one on one. What also is important for the audience to know is that this has been studied in patients with a proximal abortions as well as Proximal at mid substance in effect most of our patients in our clinical studies were mid substance had mid substance tears. So we're other. Technologies may be more focused on proximal belgian. Beer is can be used for the majority of tier indications and so i just wanted the audience to know that we sometimes gets a little confused with primary repair whereas really it on it address most the majority of tier indications now. I think that's a great point. I'll i'll reiterate that to the bottom line is if you're gonna try and do a repair with standard techniques that we have available now they used sort of the rotator cuff instruments but the issue has to be pulled off of the bone graft reattached and that's dot felices doing And other doctors around the world. The vast majority of acl tears. It happened basically. It's like a hand. Grenade goes off inside the acl. It's mid substance and it's like horses tail the middle. There's no way you can tie everything together. And that's the indication in particular where the bear implant Seems to be able to to really do well on. That's where the majority of acl tears are. So i think that's that's a great point so so you've got your fda clearance now again for our listeners. Everybody understands what is commercialization means so that everybody understands how they're going to. How are we going to see this coming forward. Where are we going to find. Yeah so we're in the process of hiring our commercial sales organization and we will be launching a beer implant in select areas initially and then more broadly as we go into two thousand and twenty two so there will be some territories some regions of the country that will see their sooner than later by by the end of next year. I think that it would be more broadly available. So the bottom line is because at this point. It's got his fda approval at this point Doctors can now actually do this implant with standard technique. Without having to enroll patients into clinical trials. Clinical trials will still be continuing the further proof decides right you. Yeah you're very welcome. That's fantastic so you know martha this is We love this stop. you know we. We have incredible people from all over the world. Orthopedic surgeons industry that come and tell their stories. You know. i want you to give where we're nearing the end. But i wanted to provide a piece of advice. Now i know that you you see yourself as as a person not necessarily a man or woman in industry but for the young women out there that are really considering you know Corporate job corporate process of moving into the cc becoming a ceo president. What type of advice would you give them. to be able to help achieve that goal. Yeah i think Following a true north and really focusing in on what the goals are what you really want to do. And then advocating for yourself really Believe in yourself. Don't take no figure out how to get there. Learn listen and develop yourself because you're in charge of your own career. Nobody else don't advocate it to anyone else jake charge and make it happen it. It's not easy sometimes but at the end of it. That's what you really want. Then it you'll make it happen and only you to make that happen. Fantastic advice martha you know. I i so appreciate you. We've had such a rich history together. I'm so happy that we could share your story. I know that this is going to be a beloved episode people You have such a a large fan base across industry and doctors. And so i thank you so much for taking the time to visit with us. Today it's been a pleasure. This is dr. Scott sigmund hashtag follow the fro host of the.

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"Just an enormous amount of work and out of that came some really profound learnings about the technology That you know you and others were a big contributors to and i never forget sort of the brilliant maneuver are. We're like art controls right. How are you going to judge this against what was done traditionally right and you in the team keno came up with the idea of the sos data which was initially part of arthritis but them became public. Public is part of anna. An arthroscopy you know association. America and you could. You could look at the cohorts for the same thing for partial rotator cuff tears and full thickness rotator cuff tears. Where you had reported outcomes from these other doctor smaller over the country and then you could y them up against each other and released. Do you know. I'll never forget it. With louis. mcintyre presented the first time at anna the data. It was like rotten tomatoes like the dude needed a screen up there for all the things that were throwing out all right and then literally. It was a year later. I think and he got up on the podium and then he presented the two year data and it was everybody was like oh okay. That looks good. Great stuff you know from this. What is this crazy thing to becoming. It became accepted. And then obviously you know over. Over number of years more and more doctors became a part of it. And then the the the success story for any any startup. Ceo right is to be able to take it across the finish line and either go public or get bought out to a larger company that gives you legitimacy and then in two thousand eighteen. I believe smith. Temper of seventeen december of seventeen smith and nephew. One of the largest medical device companies in the world purchases rotation medical. And you are legitimate. How cool was that. I've pretty cool. Yeah we'd like that. Well that's others. They become a martha. I mean you're working. This is your baby. You know all of the things that you need to do and then finally you get there and then you you stay on for a while to. Obviously they want you to be a part of the transition as as it moves on. But what was so. I mean you know. I feel again like a among guy razz from how i built this. But what was your market cap for rotation medical when you took over as a fledgling startup and then what was the march captain that it went for when it was purchased by smith and nephew. I can't remember precisely a number. But let's say it was low single digits. Right it was it was pretty immune. Just didn't have one and when we sold we sold for two hundred ten million dollars pretty remarkable story and it has been doing remarkably well smith and nephew. They've i think recouped all of their investment by now. If i'm not mistaken let's say smith and nephew i think is pretty happy. Okay that's agree corporate way to Politically correct say what. We're trying to say you're so that's awesome so so again. You know here you argue. Hit one out of the park which is a great accomplishment for yourself You know a lot of people would just say you know. I'm gonna take some time off right. I mean this is a win it. Was you know. I'm really proud of what i've accomplished. Let's take some time off and see what's going on. But not martha. Martha is the queen of bovine and she gets approached by martha murray and crew. And tell us about your next venture where you are. Now what's happening so I was approached by one of the board members of miaki orthopedics and nia With epedemics on has a beer in plant and if your listeners. Don't know what that is. This is an implant again that comes from the kyle that is used to enable the body to heal a torn. Acl and sigi. The story on this is very similar but easier to tell Do you remember when we were talking about the cow patch. And we would say oh. Can you put it on the top of the super Native and it heels on the bottom you remember that in the the fact that you're saying cow patch out loud to be is unbelievable story so wherever you know martha would be up on the edge and she would laid off. Gb gases is the the the rotation medical bovine bio inductive implant. And then i get up there. And i'd start talking and if you try to talk to a patient you say oh we're going to put in this bio bovine biomedicine. What is this thing. And i'm like it just came to me one day. I'm like oh it's it's the cow patch time i got up there on the bony. Like scott seagate is not a patch it is not a couch. It's an implant but eddie l. itself funny story well you you were very effective in Destroying all of the great marketing. We were doing bridget. You're welcome for for two hundred dollars. I guess we did okay. I had i had no financial interest in rotation or smith nephew. Nor have i ever had no share. So there was no financial benefit for me for the sale of this product. For sure i wanna make protested. That now does absolutely true. So i'm getting back to the beer implant. This is a technology that was developed by dr. Murray martha murray in an academic lab at boston children's hospital in it's the first implant the birth technology to clinically demonstrate that it enables the patients native acl to heal and be restored to its original orientation We were the first we received the novo. A in december of last year and the fda was very interested and they they actually press. Release this The day that they get the morning the a ninety minutes after we got our crucible. They sent out a press release about the implant and in their End of the year Sort of state of affairs excited. The beer implant is one of the most novel devices approved in two thousand and twenty this of implant has been clinically tested extensively and its uses supported by level one evidence and we all know that small companies. That's a really hard thing to do. It takes a long time to run these trials With the kind of follow up that we wanna do and it's very expensive but there have been a number of trials conducted on there and we're very excited about that on and getting ready to lodge commercially a very very soon. Yeah no congratulations. And i don't think the fda gets very excited about any of their clearance products very often right. It's me the exact opposite. So.

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"Hello world is your favorite opioid sperry. Orthopedic surgeon. Dr scott sigmund here for another episode of the ortho. Show podcast where we bring you the best of the best in the pd space. I am really excited today. We have one of my most favorite people on the world. Certainly my most favorite woman in corporate america martha shade news the president and ceo of meow the peaks martha. It is a pleasure to have you. You got to sick men and backyard. She daybreak surgeons if not my favorite l. There's a lotta we don't want to piss anybody off. You know people aren't the but i do appreciate that very much so So to our listeners. Martha i go way back. But before we get to our relationship i think you have a a really remarkable story Of your spot in in corporate america within the c. Suite and women in general as best as i can tell i've looked through your bio. I think you came out of the womb is a vice president. I don't see you listed anywhere less than vice president. But but let's go to just anybody where you're from originally and then we'll work through education all that good stuff from Originally i'm from massachusetts tonight currently zeid in massachusetts with my husband and so i left the state for a while on working in corporate america and came back massachusetts in nineteen eighty five and have been here percents. So you did your undergrad at. Unh and then we've got to give you know. I'm not sure if sharieff knows this but we have a little michigan state. Spartan activity here. You got your. You've got your masters cherie aware of your green heritage. So we wish probably just remind him. Yeah i think so because as you know he bleeds. Green is is ribbons. All got michigan state. He he loves as far as far as for sure. But and then you come back to northeastern to get your mba And then i've got just sort of ninety five you were sort of. It was pre medical at that point. You're sort of in the wastewater world. But even at that point you had already sort of climb the corporate ladder and you're succeeding. So just tell us about that process. Yeah so it does sound a little odd. That i went into waste ford given that i have a a biology degree but i got a call one day. I was working at ancon which is part of poor now. Got a call one day from a recruiter. we said there's this little startup and looking for somebody to come in and wrong global marketing. And i was naive and didn't know what i was doing. I sit sure going over when i joined. It was very very small company and over the course of my tenure. They were quiz or by years. We made over two hundred acquisitions and ultimately sold to french company It was an incredible experience. I think that it was easy for me to make that decision because entrepreneur at heart on. You can't take that out of a person. Even though a lot of my career had been in big companies. I still approached business with Entrepreneurship than You know something else so if it me really well on had a great time they are you know sort of from there are gravitated to life sciences. So it's interesting because that's a real prelude to later in life as we talk about where you and i intersect but You know. I think it's fascinating that that there's a certain of a group of people entrepreneurs that are willing to to risk all at 'em be able to go to a start up a really comfortable job in position and then be able to really try and make true innovative change so so you move over life sciences So you go to bristol myers right as well and then you you You move on from vice president and you finally get the presidential position at zimmer trauma where you spent years as well so you really now getting into orthopedics. You got the flow. You're seeing to find what you like to do at this point. So tell us about the experience of being a woman. As president zimmer and trauma at what. What year was that that was in two thousand eleven i believe. What was your experience there. Where's that well received as it just is what it is. It doesn't really matter. I'm martha here. You know. I think all of that and more so i don't think of myself as a woman in business. I think of myself as just another person who needs to prove themselves every other person whether you're male or female needs to prove themselves and so i never sweated the small stuff sure. There were things that happened right. You know if if i had a a thinner skin maybe woulda bothered me. But i'm i'm a little tone deaf to those kind of things have always been that way and i think it served me well because because i didn't let me down the other thing is you know i never thought that my opportunities different than a man. I never apologized for being. A woman advocated very strongly. And i've taught my daughter to be a strong advocate for herself. And i think that That's what women need to do. We need to advocate like men advocate. We need to ask for it..

Mandy Connell
Alabama Hospitals Have Run out of ICU Beds
"Alabama is out of I C u beds, State health officer Dr Scott Harris says. They've converted other rooms into makeshift ICUs. While some patients well, they're being forced to wait in the ER until a bed becomes available.

WTOP 24 Hour News
Former FDA Head Warns COVID-19 Delta Variant Will Infect 'Majority' of Unvaccinated Americans
"The former head of the Food and Drug Administration is warning unvaccinated Americans that becoming infected with the delta variant of the coronavirus is very serious. Dr. Scott Gottlieb, speaking on CBS's face the Nation yesterday about this fast spreading variants, and most people will either get vaccinated. Or have been previously infected, Or they will get this delta variant and for most people who get this Delta variant, it's going to be the most serious virus that they get in their lifetime. In terms of the risk of putting them in the hospital, the Delta Varian has fueled a rise in infections in all 50 states. Hospitalizations of also jumped. 36% and deaths are up 26%, according to CDC

WTOP 24 Hour News
Gottlieb: Delta Variant Will Be "Most Serious Virus" Unvaccinated Get in Their Lifetime
"Commissioner Dr Scott Gottlieb says cases are on the rise in every state in the country. This variant is so contagious for most people who get this Delta variant. It's going to be the most serious virus that they get in their life. Time in terms of the risk of putting them in the hospital. Dangerous

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"I am really excited. We're taking a little pivot here at the ortho show and we're bringing you now pitch pro. We have an amazing group of panelists. think of. it's sort of like a shark. Tank for orthopedics joe mullings vin dasa the fro and the bearded one matthew ray scott on a panel where medical device and pharma companies come in to pitch their story. We listen we talk. We provide advice and it is a minute. We have amazing personalities. We provide amazing counsel and advice to these groups. We are having a lot of fun. You guys are gonna love it. Pitch pro by the ortho show for medical media. This is the author shared. Hello world is your favourite opioid sparing orthopedic surgeon. Dr scott segment here to host another episode of the ortho. Show podcast where we bring you the best of the best and your pd space. We are heading back to southern california. Where i am so jealous. My old stomping grounds in manhattan beach. We have dr rod parsa. Who's on with us. Today is an orthopedic surgeon sports medicine as well as regenerative medicine specialist In manhattan beach. Which is what am i old time stomping grounds time. Early job ron. It's a pleasure to have you on. How're you and thank you so much for having me. We miss you over here. I know with remember came out. Like pre pandemic almost like two and a half years ago and i was giving a talk and you happen to come out to us. We got to meet you that night. Which was awesome. Well before the ortho show podcast. But i was always sort of thinking of you in the cool things you're doing in the way in which you practice thought it would be awesome to have you on so thank you so much for joining us. It's a pleasure extra having me so six twenty five esplanade. That sound familiar to you. It's not the man still in by your curler. Job in nineteen ninety-five. I'll never forget when. I drove cross country and i was like you know. Look i'm driving cross country with all the stuff. There's no way that i'm not gonna like live on the ocean and it just went back and forth and just found this condo and it was just perfect and this two bedroom condo..

Squawk Pod
New Covid Study Hints at Long-Term Loss of Brain Tissue
"Let's talk about This study out of the uk about covid because it suggests there could be some long term loss of brain tissue from covid for those who've gotten which could have long term consequences dot said the destruction of brain tissue could explain why kobe patients lost their sense of smell. There's been lots of conversations even to this very day about whether you should vaccinate or you shouldn't get vaccinated and there are people who think You know younger kids might not want to get vaccinated That they'd i know parents who think maybe it's better that they get cove it And i think the answer is starting to bloom clear and clear that vaccination may be the right answer. We'll talk to dr scott lee scott gottlieb about

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"How do <Speech_Male> you find the ability <Speech_Male> to be <Speech_Male> a supermom. <Speech_Male> A super <Speech_Male> wife <Speech_Male> look beautiful <Speech_Male> be <Speech_Male> rugged in the operating <Speech_Male> room do <Speech_Male> be an orthopedic <Speech_Male> surgeon. Do <Speech_Male> all of those things <Speech_Male> and try to do them. <Speech_Male> Well what would your advice <Speech_Male> be <SpeakerChange> to our listeners. <Speech_Music_Female> I <Speech_Female> think what's <Speech_Female> important is <Speech_Female> to identify <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> your core values. <Speech_Female> Not just for <Speech_Female> work not just for family <Speech_Female> but you know <Speech_Female> what what <Speech_Female> are the core values <Speech_Female> that are important <Speech_Female> to you <Speech_Female> and when <Speech_Female> you really have a good <Speech_Female> sense of that <Speech_Female> then you can look <Speech_Female> at all the things <Speech_Female> that you might have your <Speech_Female> hands in right <Speech_Female> and all the different <Speech_Female> roles that you <Speech_Female> play and you <Speech_Female> can assess <Speech_Female> how <Speech_Female> they measure <Speech_Female> up. According to how <Speech_Female> many of your core <Speech_Female> values they're actually <Speech_Female> supporting <Speech_Female> And <Speech_Female> so you know <Speech_Female> for me. <Speech_Female> The things that <Speech_Female> take up my <Speech_Female> time include <Speech_Female> my <Speech_Female> clinical work. <Speech_Female> My family <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Keeping myself <Speech_Female> healthy and <Speech_Female> some of my recreational <Speech_Female> things obviously the <Speech_Female> podcast <Speech_Female> And <Speech_Female> so you <Speech_Female> know. I try to <Speech_Female> include <Speech_Female> the things. <Speech_Female> I juggle in the things <Speech_Female> that i i <Speech_Female> time doing. <Speech_Female> I make sure <Speech_Female> that they <Speech_Female> are things that <Speech_Female> support what my core <Speech_Female> values are <Speech_Female> because at the end <Speech_Female> of the day you can find <Speech_Female> yourself <Speech_Female> really <Speech_Female> with a lot of different <Speech_Female> obligations <Speech_Female> that really. <Speech_Female> Don't <Speech_Female> check those check <Speech_Female> boxes and <Speech_Female> so then it's like <Speech_Music_Female> we'll we'll why <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> you know. Why <Speech_Female> continue doing that. 'cause <Speech_Female> there's a finite <Speech_Female> amount of time in the day <Speech_Female> we have a finite <Speech_Female> amount of time <Speech_Female> on this planet <Speech_Female> and <Speech_Female> we should <Speech_Music_Female> spend the time doing <Speech_Female> things that reflect <Speech_Female> of what our <Speech_Female> values are and who <Speech_Female> we really are and so <Speech_Female> you know it does <Speech_Female> take it does take <Speech_Female> a lot of planning <Speech_Female> and organization <Speech_Female> to make all those <Speech_Female> things fit together <Speech_Female> <hes> <Speech_Female> and it takes prioritization <Speech_Female> and also <Speech_Female> being president but <Speech_Female> i think ultimately <Speech_Female> think about those values <Speech_Female> in it helps <Speech_Female> guide you in <Speech_Female> in what <Silence> you should be <SpeakerChange> focusing <Speech_Male> on <Speech_Male> so <Speech_Male> i think as as we're <Speech_Male> leaving if anybody wants <Speech_Male> to really know <Speech_Male> you know what nancy <Speech_Male> yen shipley is. <Speech_Male> I would suggest <Speech_Male> you look at <Speech_Male> the video <SpeakerChange> of her. Getting <Speech_Male> ready to go <Speech_Male> get her vaccine. <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> Where is <Speech_Male> that. is that an <SpeakerChange> instagram <Speech_Female> visit. <Speech_Female> I i have <Speech_Female> that <Speech_Female> on my website <Speech_Female> at nancy. Md <Speech_Female> dot com. But it's also <Speech_Female> on on <Speech_Female> tiktok which <Speech_Female> is purely a <Speech_Female> repository for <Speech_Female> all my silliness <Speech_Female> energy. That i need <Speech_Female> to get out. There is <Speech_Female> no medical advice <Speech_Female> there whatsoever <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> rape <Speech_Male> video. <Speech_Male> I would everybody to watch <Speech_Male> again. I really think <Speech_Male> it's subs up. <SpeakerChange> Nancy <Speech_Male> super well but <Speech_Male> you know this <Speech_Male> is exactly what we do <Speech_Male> here. The ortho show <Speech_Male> we bring these remarkable <Speech_Male> orthopedic <Speech_Male> surgeons from around the <Speech_Male> world who <Speech_Male> tell their very unique <Speech_Male> stories. I <Speech_Male> think nancy. <Speech_Male> I love your energy. <Speech_Male> I love what you're doing. <Speech_Male> Thank you so <Speech_Male> much for sharing <Speech_Male> all the things that you're <Speech_Male> doing within your work <Speech_Male> life balance and your podcast <Speech_Male> and isn't <Speech_Male> worth. Pd keeler is <Speech_Male> really been a pleasure having <Speech_Female> you on the show thank <Speech_Male> you. Thanks <SpeakerChange> so much for <Speech_Male> having me. <Speech_Male> Yeah my pleasure. <Speech_Male> Dr scott sigmund <Silence> hashtag follow the fro <Speech_Male> host <Silence> of the ortho show <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> till <Speech_Music_Male> next time.

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"So this one's fun you know. We continue to to bring the amazing stories of these orthopedic surgeons from around the world and the ansi shipley is one of those She is incredibly passionate about all things in her life. Her work life balance is amazing. She provides a some really good counsel. And how to do that What i sense best about nancy is that she's an incredible intellect and a great orthopedic surgeon. She also likes to have fun and she enjoys all aspects of her life. She has this really cool. Podcast called the six percent podcast which is definitely worth and where she talks to women in male dominated occupations and really gets amazing stories about air force pilot and ceos and directors and. I think that's actually absolutely worthwhile to listen to as well. Her brand is unique She has a great story. We had fun..

No Meat Athlete Radio
Dr. Scott Harrington on Why a No Oil, Low Fat Diet Is Optimal
"You're in the know oil. Low fat camp i presume alba's understand that and why you arrived that a bad Conclusion yes yes. Okay well this is you know. You have the paleo kito folks who are not that scared of fat and you know and then on the other side you know you have this like whole foods loaf No oil low fat folks. So there's problems with fat namely saturated fat and we know. Trans fats are carcinogenic. And in bad and they're coming out of the diet but saturated fat is another problem that increases your cholesterol by decreasing. Ldl receptors in the liver. So you don't get as much elliot pulled out. So we know we know saturated fats bad but what about oil so oil. Is the coca cola hidden sugar in coca cola of the fat world. Okay so what. I mean by that. Is it's hidden calories and so when you go to the restaurant and you order fajitas for instance you say if he as healthy i'm just gonna order veggie fajitas and it's going to be on a flower and i'm gonna eat it and it's going to be super healthy but you get it and it's dripping oil. Which is i forget. Maybe it's like one hundred and twenty cows per teaspoon tablespoon of oil. And so you're just going to get extra calories now all of oil and vegetable oils When you compare them against animal. Fats are studies. Show that they're they're healthier. They're healthier for you like when it's a head to head comparison you have your lipid profiles in your body are better when when you're when you're eating oil as compared to an animal fat yet but but there again once again so you're gonna usually when people are switching to a plant may side. They're trying to lose weight and get down back to their eighteen year weight and when you hit a plateau you gotta first thing yet check. Is that oil.

The Sportscaster and Her Son
"dr scott" Discussed on The Sportscaster and Her Son
"As who he compares. Justin fields test results to its. Don't the It's pretty amazing. Okay so we were calling the name of this show. How smart is your quarterback. But that's not exactly how we should explain this There's a lot of testing that can be done and believe me teams want to know about the guys. They're going to draft. So i made a call out to dr scott goldman. He's the director of performance psychology for athletic intelligence measures. He has some really interesting stuff to talk about. The athletic intelligence quotient test. This is the tests. You may have heard that justin fields did really really good on. Dr goldman joins us now on the sports caster and her son dr goldman. How are you today. i'm doing well. Thank you for opportunity to talk about the asu. I'm looking forward to this conversation. I'll absolutely so explain the iq test a lot of us that go back a few years. Remember the wunderlich over the years so explain your test and how it differs sure So let's start with even the that you opened with. Which is how smart as your quarterback. I think what's interesting. Is people use smart intelligence and knowledge interchangeably. When it's not smart and knowledge to me falls more under a bucket of experience is knowing the right answer. Smart as like. Oh this guy knows what to do in this situation but intelligence is different. The simplest definition of intelligence it's our ability to acquire process and apply information so Whether you're if you're a firefighter who has to kick a door open in a smoke filled room and quickly locate where potential threats as well as where potential people say. That's a cognitive visual task. Identifying those key important details and or quarterback who's going through his progressive read Same kind of cognitive tasks so I think one area of differentiation is the difference between experience intelligence. And so what we do is we measure intelligence and as you pointed out. There are Watts of of Assessments out there. That measure intelligence. And you're asking. So how do we differentiate between what we do. What other companies do so start with the notion of My partner and i both have. Phd's in school psychologists. I'm a phd in clinical psychology. Then i have a phd in school psychology. My partner has a phd in school psychology. And then i've also received advanced training in performance psychology and sports psychology and then put the last twenty years. I've been embedded sports psychologist in To academic departments at the ncaa level and then with to nfl teams and two nba team. So so part of what i think. Also differentiates us is our ability to communicate to coaches and players information of report so Still kinda going through the details of the. And i appreciate the opportunity to kinda go deep. What's one of the joys of being on a podcast right yeah. I think he's a thirty second sound by. There's no limit. Yeah so so The predominant theory of intelligence that most instruments us in the theory of intelligence called can tell horn carol theory of intelligence of your child if your child has ever been tested for learning disability or.

America's First News
Biden Backs Waiving International Patent Protections for COVID-19 Vaccines
"Morning, the U. S trade representative announcing that the Biden administration supports a waiver of intellectual property protections for covert 19 vaccine patents. Will advocate the lift The measures with the World Trade Organization representative Catherine Tie, noted that President to Biden strongly believes in the protections but considers the waiver needed S O that Other countries, especially those experiencing a surge and infections like India can ramp up their vaccine programs. The White House has faced pressure to support the waiver. But critics and some drug manufacturers argue it's too risky and won't actually increase global vaccine distribution. In fact, Visor board member of Dr Scott Gottlieb Says the U. S. Needs to be honest about the process. Look, We just need to be honest about what we're promising when not if we promise that we're going to give away the AIP were not promising that anybody is going to get a dose from the manufacturing facility outside the United States for at least a year, And that's not the most circumstance I think could take longer than that. I think the Chinese and the Russians do have the capacity. Copy these vaccines. There's one vaccine manufacturing South Africa that we could potentially work with to do a tech transfer to stand up manufacturing in that facility. They couldn't make a vaccine soup to nuts because this is a multi part process different facilities and needed for different parts. This process, even fives and manufactures the vaccine over multiple facilities they could take on, perhaps to fill, finishing or some parts of the state steps involved in manufacturing vaccine. It would take time it would take at least six months to a year. You'd have to put personnel new equipment in there to do that. I'm not saying it's impossible, but it's not going to be something that solves the problem in next six months, maybe the next 12 months. Audio courtesy of CNBC. All 164 members of the World Trade Organization will have to agree on the matter before Ah, waivers implemented.

Aviation News Talk podcast
American Airlines to Resume Hiring Pilots This Fall
"But we have more stories of airline hiring in episode one forty two back in march twenty twenty one at the beginning of the pandemic. We've talked about how people training to become. Airline pilots would probably see their plans. Pushback a couple of years but that they should keep working on their certificates and building hours. And now we're seeing that recovery. American airlines according to the story from dallas news dot com is starting to hire pilots again for the first time since the pandemic began. It says american airlines will start hiring pilots again. This fall hoping to add nearly nine hundred aviators by the end of two thousand twenty. Two american said it plans to recall all formerly furloughed pilots back to active status by the end of the summer as well. Americans plans call for hiring about three hundred new pilots by the end of the year in double that number in twenty twenty two trying to make up for the thousand pilots who have retired due to age or who took early retirement during the pandemic. It's pilot plan. Comes as airlines boost schedules in anticipation of the strong summer. Flying season kovic vaccination distribution and fatigue from the virus have traveled buying tickets at levels not seen since before. The pandemic hiring pilots is stark. Change from just a few months ago. When american airline was threatening to furlough more workers without additional government payroll support including eighteen hundred and fifty pilots. The carrier also plans to honor its job offers to pilots hired before the pandemic. But who never made it into training or an american airlines cockpit. The sudden demand for new pilots could put a strain on regional airlines where those pilots are now employed about half of new pilots. American come from one of its regional airlines including envoy. Psa in piedmont. American said it will coordinate with its wholly owned subsidiary regional airlines to make sure the pipeline of new pilots doesn't disrupt flying

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"In that was i would finish At high you finish my script. But it's actually nice to be able to empathize with athletes. don't go. Well you know like when you have a problem you have to stop playing in like you know when you're telling those young athletes like listen. I know how you feel like. I know how bad this sucks to not be able to play your forty more because you have this injury but like life does go on like and you will learn from this and this will be a lesson for you and also just having a bunch of surges. Knowing what that feels like hasn't been. I do shoulder elbow surgeon. I've had a bunch of my own so that helped me a ton to be able to to be hurt. It sucked when you twenty twenty one years old. And you know you're done but you know to be an adult now and be able to go back and emphasized that those kids great. Yes med school. And i like everybody else out. You go interview as many places as you can. And i remember. I interviewed in greenville south carolina and i remember the old the chairman there went to the citadel in. He recommended that. I read this book from pat. Calm right. I already read a bunch of books by pat conroy. Anyway in high school and he was called my losing season. And i went and read..

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"Show podcast where we bring you the best of the best in the orthopedic world and again. We have no exception to that rule. We have dr kevin cruises joining us. Today who is an orthopedic surgeon dow down in dallas texas. I think that's the first time were making the trip down. The big d He's an upper. Extremity specialist shoulder elbow in england born and bred in indiana and. We're talking about your football time at the university for sure didn't down in. Greenville south carolina at the stephen hawking's clinic fellowship at the university of pittsburgh where we've got some friends there as well and then i'm really excited to talk about the time spent in france as you know i've done a little bit of that too is ios walsh was well. It is a pleasure to have you on ken. How are you. i'm doing great. Thank you very much for having me on. I think you've got an awesome podcast. I listen to a lot of your episodes and flattered that you did. You would have someone like me on your interesting stuff excited to talk to you you know. We're we're really having a real good time with this thing. I gotta tell you. We've got our exciting pitch. Pro episodes are coming onto which everybody What everybody know about which is sort of a shark tank thing that we're doing within The orthopedic world with medical device and with pharma companies. We already shot our first three. Were really excited about that. All right. it's a man solicits. We'd like a talker stories. Man we want to hear about what y'all bow where you came from. How you did this whole orthopedic stuff. So so. you're born and bred in indiana. Tell us about your life in indiana. Yes so. I grew up in indianapolis small suburb. North of the city. Crumble indiana No my dad was an internal medicine. Doctor that kinda got me interested in medicine and You have to grow playing sports and just messing around friends in you. Know played basketball Gravitated more towards football in high school and then ended up walk on implanted into university in. I lived in indianapolis for twenty six years of my life. And i actually. I always thought i was gonna go back in practice. I had a pretty good good set up with with a group there. When i was a resident in south carolina by stanley action moving away to denver and when her family moved it was kind of like you know i kinda got opened up to other possibilities in. So that's that's kind of how i ended up in dallas is i. She got turned me into a free bird. Do really have to go back there. My parents don't live there. Mccamley there on. I'm like all right. We can look at some other cities. And it's interesting. I trained with a bunch of guys in greenville The were ut southwestern guys 'cause there's kind of a connection between ut southwestern unveil so yeah ended up doused. but now. i loved growing up in indiana. I have nothing but great things to say about it and we're going back here in a couple of weeks to go to the race. It's going to be a time. It was memorial day weekend. Is that when the wrestling world will begin. Yup that's awesome so do come. You just skip over. This'll walking on playing for indiana football. While i could get big ten. I mean talked. I mean that must have been pretty crazy. It was good. You know. I mean it was funny because i was i would say i was a slightly above high school football player. At if you look at me. Physically physical people say oh. You played football in indiana mike. Well you know. I lost like forty pounds when i stopped playing but i was a walk on linebacker..

The News & Why It Matters
YouTube pulls Florida governor's video, citing misinformation
"Youtube has deleted a video in which Florida governor rhonda's santa's and by the way a bunch of medical experts so actual doctors Questioned the effectiveness of having children wear masks to stop the spread of covid so the video was removed wednesday and there was so scientists was joined by oxford geologist Harvard professor Dr scott lists and another doctor from stanford and because they were contributing to covid. Nineteen medical misinformation. They had the they had the the whole video removed. So by the way to santa's at one point in the video asked if it was necessary for kids to wear masks in school and dr one of the doctors in response said children should not wear face masks. They don't need it for their own production and they don't need it for protecting other people either. Another doctor said it is developmentally in appropriate. It doesn't help on disease spread. And of course doctor said there's no scientific rationale or logic to have children wear masks in

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"We had no not operative sports medicine doctors. Nothing and you know today Kresa mods the team physician for the new york yankees for new york city football club. T shawn lynch's the team physician for fordham. I take care of columbia. Dave trophy takes care of manhattan guide about ecologists forty five high schools brady. Leary's are not ops sports guy who's just crushing it so it's it's been amazing just from the sports side of things to be able to have been able to have a part in that what growth which was really you know again very very unique and when i meant to are so many people now which is one of my passions you know when you have that opportunity to do something you know and not be the tenth guy on the team will be the first or second able to create something in your own vision while nerve wracking daunting. There's something really special about that if you're given the the resources to do it and if you have the support to do it And i certainly did. I mean the mentors. I had allowed me to get to where i've got is Is something. I talked about all time and pay that forward as much as i possibly can. Well you can't go. I mean Covid anyway. I could not go to a meeting which i would attend routinely you know five six seven where i could not run into a bill. Wien fellow. I mean you're like it's like bill bella checker andy reid. You know you've got this this this legacy of fellows that you've created across the country. That are unbelievable. I mean they're just at the top of their game and must give great satisfaction knowing that you've helped to treat that or train them so you're really helping to sort of treat these patients that you've never met. It's a really cool thing. Yeah well look. I think that you know for those of us. That going academics. I mean there's a lot of different reasons. People do it but for me without question the the lasting legacy hopefully and i said this the other day i'm not i don't spend much time on linked ian but what i got a note that mike ri- way when of my fellows who i know you know mike. Posted on linked in about a novel approach that he just got published for doing a poster approach for total shoulders and in just struck me like what. What's cool about having fellowship in residency. Is that you hopefully are going to have fellows and residents that are going to surpass you and be better than you and there are some people that get threatened by that and i saw the opposite of that. Like i'm going to revel in your success so much That more so than oh you know. I want you to fail because that makes me look like the big guy i i couldn't think anything further so when i see mike riley doing great. May i see steed goldberg. One of my fellow scot who basically started a revolutionary total shoulder system in his garage. It's a total game changer. It's fda approved. It's gonna get bought by one of the big companies and it's totally transformative instead..

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"I gotta tell you. That was a very awkward conversation. When k j called and said you know how much do you really wanna do sports versus shoulder because you know if you come here. We're not sure about scott. I'm like you can't put that pressure on me. Come on like you know what it was. It was awesome because You got to go to kay. Jay and i went to columbia and those were the days for the listeners. In for the young residents there was no match and so it was the total wild wild west And you saw for those of you who think for a moment that you don't want to have a match for fellowship residency. Just call us off line. We can tell you the horror stories because as as challenging as the matches without a match. It's it's really bad. Yeah no it was. It was a stressful times for sure and But you know look at look at the amazing time we had there and all the great accomplishments that we've had so it's been Again i hearken back to our residency in our time together and training and you know it was it was it was it was a it was a lot of work. I mean we spend a lotta time in the hospital back then and But it was worth it for sure and we all came out. Most of us is really good. Orthopedic surgeons really able to operate and take care of our patients so well. Now that was the task semo was to train clinically outstanding orthopedic surgeons. And if you did research that was on your own. And that wasn't like known for but they were. They were definitely known. You look around the entire boston area. And it's just littered with outstanding. Clinical orthopedic surgeons that have got into practice in had stellar careers. I and then there's another smaller groups that were interested in academics. Were able to follow that. Pathway as well yes give the shouts man let who are chairman across the country. We've.

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"The best of the best in the world and i am really excited for today's episode. We have dr william levin. Who is the frank tinge field chairman of orthopedic surgery at columbia medical center. As i like to call the professor he is also the editor in chief of the yellow journal. The journal of the american academy of orthopedic surgery. I could literally spend the next thirty five minutes going through his cv and all of the amazing things that he has done inuk world. But we're gonna we're going to skip that. Get right into the fun stories because the next thing that doctor levin is is now he is the official fact checker of the author. Show podcast. that's gonna have to pop onto his cv but most importantly he is one of my dearest friends on the planet. Welcome dr bill aviv. Sankey nice to see my friend. It is a pleasure to see here with so excited. I know that you spent a little time on the ortho show before my arrival is the host. But we have such a rich history. I felt that we had to get you back on and really talk about some fun stuff in our twenty five to thirty years that we have known each other and i mean the first Factcheck the night thing. You know all right. So here's the first fact so july twenty first nineteen sixty four. william levin is born in winnipeg manitoba canada. Exactly right okay. So number one. Were on a roll here. People thought good so your fathers your mothers lawyer not yet a supreme court justice. But you're in canada. They decide they wanna pop over the border and they wanna move to a federal in fargo. North dakota does the audience. No one. I think we probably explain. That's a small jewish village. I think that's what it is. But i think it's pretty close back all right. Heather do a fact. Check that fourth place Though i think it's fantastic. So that's i mean that's a really interesting story in of itself but just tell us a little bit about that. Well yeah you know. My my dad was here. he he had in he and my mom. We're both from winnipeg. They wanted to practice medicine in canada. But the the canadian healthcare system wasn't a real disaster and then they had a. They had a kind of family. Tragedies i don't know if you've been know it but i had an older brother named jamie who died of sids at age six months. Totally normal healthy kid and he would have been the fourth levin kid so they moved back to winnipeg for a period of time. Because my mom was know. Obviously charlie a depressed in so tragically stricken and so they moved back to try to make candidate work and it just didn't work and so they moved back to the i was born. I was the makeup child for jamie who passed away and then after three months i like to joke. I crawl across the border and they made the the escape to fargo four hours due south of winnipeg in. That's where i grew up. It's a dad obviously was a major influence as a doctor and then I mean i.

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"And the point that i that i am at today Over and above just doing well getting good step one scores being a away or adding an honor society behind you work hard and then the last thing i would say is When you're in medical school in your kind of trying to pick that sub specialty is be true to yourself and try to find someone who can really tell you what it's like to be in with vedic surgeon because ultimately the the level one trauma. Call that you're seeing it at the county. Hospital is a little bit different than than scott simmons practice in boston. I think it's great to talk to people who have a perspective That's different than what you see at your own institution. I think it really helps clear. Clear things up in your own head fantastic advice for our listeners. Out there thinking about what is still one of the greatest occupations and careers on the planet with vedic surgeon for sure. Well look. This is exactly what we do on the ortho. Show sometimes give it to the left a little bit to the right. But we're always talking about Orthopedics orthopedic surgeons and their remarkable stories and this was a real honor to have dr dinner data on. Who's the chief resident jackson memorial and is a bright star north pd. I'm looking forward to following your career. it's been a real pleasure having you on the show. Thank you so much scott. It's been an incredible pleasure avenue haven't experienced the only ortho show and and again you know. Thanks for thanks for getting back to me and being a mentor in in a resource. I really appreciate that. It's my pleasure. Dr scott sigmund hashtag follow the fro host of the ortho show till next time a till next time..

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"I think it's on the uptick but you're going to see more bad actors get cold out in those that are legitimately working with the fda. There's going to be commercialization available and so there are a couple of amniotic companies that have m. a. t. designation which a seal from the fda and they continue to work together towards eventual approval. And they have these multicentre trials with jack far done as you may know and in another company is also faced me. Trials for both osceola arthritis in plantar fasciitis. So i think you're going to have one or two major players that had a standardized product that can be injected safely and will be proven to be effective in eventually be covered by insurance. But then you have this like lower tiered pharmaceutical companies. That don't quite have the quality of labs the regulatory oversight in compliance with the fda and going after low-hanging food of chiropractic doctors misinformed doctors. Doctors pm gets soon for using these his products. I've been expert witness on some of these cases where an orthopedic surgeon did know the products they had was laced with enter a backdoor e. Coli which is you know can cause infections. And they thought they were helping their patients. Any spacious thousands of dollars the product wasn't approved by the fda. In fact many of the cells are dead cells. So the amniotic tissue. I think the safe zone is eventually having a product that doesn't have live quote stem cells but proteins growth factors almost like a prp from a newborn but the the potential benefit is that you could standardizing quantify each injection dopes. Heireann gas at a jail shot so when you inject up patients need you know what's going into them whereas most of these amniotic products that are available. It's a crapshoot. it's hit or miss. In worst case scenario you might have infected cells. It just blows me away. That in twenty twenty one people can get away with this stuff. I mean it's like how does the company that does not have the appropriate fda backing or you know or were license or whatever. The word is abolished is but how did he go round selling this stuff. And and how can you do that. Legally in it just doesn't seem fair or right. I agree with you. It seems like the the fda has their hands full with the regulatory oversight and focusing on really the extreme cases And that's why you have. Doctors like donny. Buford out there. That are for good reason. Policing the field to protect the field. And we wanna work with the fda partner so disseminate that information. Too many docs. Because you're going to see more and more. Docs use some of these recommended products and get into trouble And sadly affect patients and leave a bad mark on the seal so it's really important to police that great stop so you know so last year. Toby twenty twenty was a virtual meeting. I had a lot of fun with scotty. Zeitz earn yet. You invited me on for little virtual fund and we had a nice little hour long presentation but You gotta be excited for toby. Twenty twenty one. What's in store so for toby. Twenty twenty one. We're really excited. We're offering a brand new Experience so.

Seattle Kitchen
Gottlieb warns New York virus variant could be fueling new outbreaks
"Face the Nation. Former FDA commissioner Dr Scott Gottlieb says he's concerned about a new variant of the virus, which has now been found in New York City. You're seeing a lot of infection surging and pockets of New York City. What we don't understand with 15 26 is whether or not people of being re infected with it, and whether or not people who might have been vaccinated are now getting infected with it. Reporting from Tel

Morning News with Manda Factor and Gregg Hersholt
Washington state sees first Brazil coronavirus variant case
"Variant of covert discovered in Brazil has now been confirmed in this state. Here's the state health officer, Dr Scott Lindquist. So I'm concerned Washington's health officer expressing worry now that the state's first case of the P one variant first discovered in Brazil has now been detected in King County, making Washington the 10th state in the country with at least one case, there aren't a lot of P one variance in the United States and for us to find one in Washington really shows us that it's a concern reason doctors were so worried. It's because of research that shows that he won varun is potentially more contagious and may impact the effectiveness of current vaccines. Right now, manufacturers and research labs are looking into that performing experiments to better understand those bearings. So far, nearly 100 cases of the variant first detected in the UK have now been found in our state, most of them in King County. The county has also reported five cases of the very first tied to South Africa. Steve

Squawk Pod
Latest Stimulus Package Could Jolt U.S. Growth, Revive Inflation in 2021
"First. Up today on the podcast. The markets and understanding is certain. Divide the anticipated one point. Nine trillion dollar stimulus package set for house passage today and recent rise in bond yields due to expectation of inflation higher. Prices have worked together to create something of a market split in the last few days as investors favour stocks tied to a recovering economy think industrials construction over the tech stocks that shine during the pandemic. Think all the stuff that powered are stay at home lives. Yesterday though technology growth stocks ward back and tech heavy nasdaq rose three point seven percent. Its best day since november it actually fallen into correction territory just the day prior that means a drop of or more. Recent highs

America's First News Show
Vaccine nationalism' is moving at full speed
"Former FDA commissioner and current Visor board member, Dr Scott Bradley told CNN received a vaccine nationalism is nothing new. And the world was not ready to battle over 19. The infrastructure was not in place to produce that enough that many vaccines so the nationalism really continues. Italy's prime minister recently announced that he's blocking the export of vaccines made in the eurozone after that several European countries threaten to follow suit. Francis Health minister applauded Italy's moved to keep vaccines made in Europe at home and threatened to do

Press Play with Madeleine Brand
Doctor appears in court video call while performing surgery
"Is being investigated after he tried to multi task while he was in surgery. Sacramento Bee reports that Dr Scott Green logged onto a video call for a traffic court trial while dressed in scrubs and with medical equipment beeping in the background. He told the court that it was okay because there was another doctor in the operating room anyway. The judge said he didn't think that was appropriate and postpone the trial. And guess what the State Medical board didn't think it was appropriate either. They asked, the doctor explained his actions. The board

San Diego's Morning News with Ted and LaDona
Plastic surgeon appears in court video call while performing surgery
"So you think you've seen some wild stuff on your video conference sessions? Imagine seeing a plastic surgeon show up in a virtual court hearing while performing operation. Wait, Wait, wait, How the Sacramento Bee reports. Dr. Scott Green did just that It is hearing this past Thursday, he appeared on video in surgical scrubs with a patient undergoing surgery. Just out of camera range. When the judge opened the hearing, he balked at going forward. Even though Green said there was another doctor to help cover. The judge decided to set a new date. And now the California Medical Board is investigating. Please don't do that. That would like to give the doctor got in trouble like he was on a skateboarder Hoverboard or something when he was operating, right? Yeah. I don't want wheels on your feet while you've got a scalpel in your hand aimed at my eyeball. Concentrate on one just the one Yeah. Sit this one. All right,

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"And you're gonna you know. Think about doing this type of procedure. Yeah so the acronym for what you're referring to is wont wideawake local anesthesia. No turning so enhancer. There's a lot of things that we do. Currently that is usually done under a local. What we call local with sedation. World with that means is. The surgical side is infiltrated with a local anesthetic. And your survey sedated through an asset agent through an iv. you're not into baited or anesthetized in with genus asia and the advantage of that is less anesthesia. That's a little bit quicker et cetera. Well the concept of woollacott is you can still do. Basically a large percentage of the basic hand surgery procedures when we we do as hand surgeons without the the anesthetic. Just just simple the local anesthetic and the way that we do. This is we. Wade is based on the injections Techniques were injected. A man that hurts us could often one of the reasons why we use. We also use epinephrine injections so that it doesn't bleed as so you don't need a tourniquet which is also the reason why we use anesthesia. Otherwise and so so based on The technique of injecting one. How you're injecting what you're injecting for. Goes the need to be anesthetized so you're basically completely awake during bridge procedure in restraint local and a lot of really basic high volume answered result. We do corp. tunnel trigger finger. Decrane released gangling seizures macedonians a any flexor tendon Wicked them completely awake. So what that does for the patient is so firstly. It's it's safer for. They don't have anesthesia. I'm not trying to say that scott As is not unsafe with safer from the minor. Complications the nausea vomiting constipation. The lightheadedness headedness linger for awhile. You save the cost of pre-operative testings we don't do any pre-operative testing okay Which is a big cost. You don't have to take time off from work for proper testing And take time for work to recover that day next day. A family member doesn't have to take time off to to come with you and take you can go in and go home by yourself. There's cost savings through paying for all anesthesia services. No fence Rents but paying for their services. The oakland Paying consultant clearances. So there's a convenience there's a safety and there's a cost advantage to doing this and you know my robinson fellows routinely say that at shocking. That more people don't do this. Because it's it's so easy. And i say the same thing as i know. It's it's one of the thing that's like uber. Once you start doing it should become really obvious But it's it's catching on and to be fair. It's nothing that we in. America have have You deserve damage. Credit for really are our peers across across the world. Who have done this. Lead this charge more so than us because around the world as you know they have less anesthesiology resources we do. We can readily get into the o. And do stuff but they often cancer. There's an alternative to doing the work without the anesthesiologist. Watch videos from allie phillips and amir ahmad foods like he's like pleadings. you know. i think the patient. I think you're actually uses the patient's other hand to assist during it up. The right side is operating on. I mean that dude doing some crazy stuff but no it. It really is amazing. How much you can do. And you're right in the us. We've got so many things that we utilize but yet health care. Resources may not be as as readily available elsewhere. So they came up with these ideas and kudos to you for for following along in that reducing the risk of things in having safety at mind for our patients and and having most importantly you know good outcome so you know great stuff really appreciate it but you know once again guys everybody. that's listening. This is another amazing story of a very unique or the pd surgeon who has taken his own path To to do really amazing stuff. And that's what we do here at the ortho show we bring you the best of the best and and you know i have to say dr. Elliot's you are the best of the best. We appreciate you so much for the hard work that you're doing within the opioid space and providing education for fellows and residents and and really moving the needle for so really. Thank you so much for taking your time. Scott cement pleasure a great job in the orthopedic community in general. I think as you now have some amazing folks in it and dad highlight their work and and to enter propel their work. You deserve credit for that as well. Thank you really appreciate you so much. This is dr scott sigmon host of the ortho show hashtag follow the fro till next time..

Squawk Pod
Biden Planning Ten Day Blitz Of Executive Actions
"In washington it is also a very very big week. President-elect biden scheduled to be sworn in as president at noontime tomorrow chief-of-staff ron claim saying the biden is planning a ten day blitz of executive actions. And for that. I'm gonna go over to joe. Who i think's going to go to washington. Yes to lon moy is going to. I don't know if she's got every executive action she's ready to go into but she's going to have the latest on the inauguration and everything surrounding The inauguration the biden teen plan for a ten day blitz. So we got that going for us. I i whatever. I'm ready for it long. That's what presidents do but i've got a little trepidation with some of it but elections have consequences. It's coming keystone. That's going away at not taking. I think that over the next over the next few days we're going to see is just a real sort of divide and juxtaposition between some of the pomp and circumstance and then some of the policy so obviously the inaugural ceremony is gonna be dramatically scaled back today. We're going to see biden and leave delaware. Make his way down to dc the not by amtrak. Because of the heightened security measures. Tonight he will be at the lincoln memorial for ceremony honoring those who have lost their lives. Tacoma nineteen but in the midst of this pandemic. there's a real desire in the administration to be seen is hitting the ground running and it's one of the reasons why we're going to see five of biden's talk nominees. Have their senate confirmation hearings today. That includes janet yellen for treasury secretary along with his director of national intelligence homeland. Security secretary of state and defense secretary. I got an early copy of yellen opening statement and she does plan to make a forceful for that one point nine billion dollar covert rescue package. That was outlined last week. She says without further action we risk a longer and more painful recession now and long term scarring of the economy later. She also says that with great at historic lows. The smartest thing we can do now is to act big now. As for that flurry of executive orders abiding planning within his first few days many of them will reverse the decisions made by president trump. The latest example came just last night on restricting travel from europe and from brazil the trump administration had said plan to lift those restrictions on january. Twenty six though visitors would still have to provide a negative cova test biden spokesperson immediately. Push back on that saying that the new administration would not lift the ban and instead she tweeted with the pandemic worsening the more contagious variants emerging around the world. This is not the time to be lifting restrictions on international travel by is also planning other executive action on immigration the keystone pipeline. The paris climate accord the world health organization. So the goal of the biden administration is to show here that they're the ones who were serious about

The Ortho Show
"dr scott" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"Own personal face you know rather than going down the line. If you're engaged a clinician for their opinion you know if your tent is while investor epi upfront about that anything wrong with that but be up front about it. Don't know hey on brand. By the way we need some investors were do on vast. I think that you shouldn't spend somebody's our way. Somebody's tired for the sole purpose of looking for an investment. Unless that you let them know ahead of time if it's a bitch to bitch if you want. But an idea hasn't advice that's something different so about that completely agree. I'd rather invest my brain than my wallet any day of the week to to make things work for sure so we you know we have a lot of non orthopedic surgeons out there that that follows a big medical device. You know following as well and You know it's the pandemic right now and it's really hard for communication for for these reps if they have new products and things that they want to say and do you have any advice for our our medical device listener reps out there about how you communicate now at this point in time and you know are you more amenable to zoom meetings and used to be things like that. What what are your thoughts there. Yeah i think so. Feel for those guys no. It's tough because it's a matter get in front of somebody. Nobody able to demonstrate things and facetime is hard to guys reach out to me through email which is fine if it's zoom meeting. You know if you happen to be in the hospital because your support mckay's for somebody else through there any way to spend a few minutes going through something It'll have a problem with either different world for the Those guys it'll be them because it's a tough world to exist under normal circumstances. I'm sure it's even harder now. With limited access unlimited ability to kind of demonstrate things and get facetime Guys what's your philosophy at the hospitals as far as reps or they an integral part of the team especially in the arthropathy world where you've got lots of movement and components and instruments. Yeah i think the reps are absolutely critical. I mean i've been doing striker hips and knees for long time now. I fairly familiar with the equipment's broaches. The genetics the implant themselves but they do at least in my hospital so much more than that i mean. They're they're making sure. I'll have the same effect every time to set up with the way like it that we have all the you know. The fire tractors and stuff that i like to use that putting out fires. Something's not there. There's a whole pan and you know. Bring it back up stats and tracking down the thing that got frappes rock band. So i think they're integral to that process in support their support the whole process of making sure that things go smoothly for me as well so The russia critical. Yeah i i. I completely agree. I mean we joke all the time. Like if you have a great rap then you know there's no noise right. You barely know that. They're there because they've done all the work behind the scenes to make it so that you don't have to ask for anything and everything is in place. What am i. Favor rep stories. Was you know. I i was one of our get remember but literally. A rep could determine what was in a sealed instrument trang by shaking the trang. She understands the noise to know. Oh yeah that's right that's where that you know That's where that is. It is side. So i think that i'm glad to hear that. We we greatly support our medical device. Reps out there that listen thank you all so much for being a part of that Of the ortho show Podcast ecosystem you guys have been a huge part of what we're doing here for sure. Yeah i don't think people realize the stuff that these guys do vina's ease i understand. You know whatever their customer their page like me or whatever cynical way you want to look at it but they really do it out to a lot behind the scenes job. I don't think i could ever do honestly so much. Running around and so much putting out fires and yet trying to make sure things go smoothly are so. I never feel you know the fact that they added dig down in central sterile to find that piece of equipment that watered off. Yeah no we completely agree. So you know ben. This is great this is this is a what we like to do here on the ortho show. We provide the unique stories of of innovative orthopedic surgeons. And you've given us a really nice window into the view of healthcare technology and the space in which we're going and you know we. We really greatly appreciate your opinions on social media and really pushing the needle As a top top voice at linked in it's a pleasure to on the show. Yeah appreciate the opportunity finally got to be on the show. It's a big honor for me. Thank you so much. We're really proud here at the author. Show our numbers continue to grow. We're proud to bring you the best of the best in the orthopedic. Space is dr scott. Sigmon hashtag follow the fro host.